If an apartment allows dogs but has a weight limit of 50 pounds could I lie and say my 85 lb dog is 50 lbs?Do apartment people actually care? Would they really notice just by eyeballing that hes too big?
>>34337215It might be just a roundabout way for them to say they don't want aggressive breeds like pits. Show a picture (mention he's exactly 50lbs or something) and see what they say.
>>34337425This OP. Most of the time those rules only get enforced when a pitt mix is found. You should be fine, also if that pic is rel. Then just don't tell them the breed. Cause I've found a few places that also don't like shepherd mixes either.
>does the dog effect me in any way? if not, fine - if yes, complain 99% of apartment people won't mind a big dog as long as it doesn't bark or leave turds aroundthe others are scared of dogs or whateverI'd say the dog was 50lb last time you weighed them, then explain the dog is old and chillalso, some dogs dont like being moved to apartments - look up a guide or 2
>>34337425>>34337491I wish there would be a more qualitative way to handle it. My dog has extremely good temperament and is generally much more quiet than small dogs.>>34337557Yeah he literally makes 0 noise. My current landlord lived in the house in the other unit where we shared a wall and asked if I had moved my dog in yet when I'd already been here for like 3 weeks. She didnt even know he was there.
>>34337717then you can mention that. also as i said i think this is 100% a breed thing (specifically not wanting pits/pit mixes or any "restricted" breeds). I live in europe and never ever heard of something like this so my assumption is that it's an anti-pit measure, simple as that.
>>34337215>could I lie and say my 85 lb dog is 50 lbs?please doas a landlord, when people do this, the fine I give them before evicte them makes it all worth it.
>>34337215I'm surprised that dog is 85lb, the dog I had growing up was that size and only weighed 50lb but I guess they were skinnier breeds